# Tuesday, November 03, 2009
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, November 03, 2009 9:52:16 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights )

It has been found via public records requests that Portland Metro says one thing publicly and has a different internal policy:

...[T]hese locations have signs posted saying that no firearms are allowed and there are no exceptions.

...

In September we made a public records request from Metro asking for all rules and restrictions dealing with firearms at facilities and locations they control. While we still have not received those we have received a copy of an executive order dealing with firearms and license holders that clearly contradicts their stated policies.

While we believe that Metro is reexamining all of its firearms restrictions, until they have corrected the many unlawful rules at locations they control, we want you to have a copy of their executive order which clearly states that license holders are NOT subject to their restrictions.

As is usual the bigots drag their feet as much as possible in their continued attempts to deprive people of specific enumerated rights even when it's made extremely clear to them they are in violation of the law.

Via email from Ben K.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, November 03, 2009 9:30:00 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Crap for brains | Politics | Quote of the Day )

...We circle back around to one of the big problems in our society, which is the idea that line-memorizing clothes horses have anything more valid to say about politics, science, or current events than the hippie on the street corner with a guitar case. The Romans had the right position in society for actors: Above cesspit cleaners, but not as well-respected as a decent whore.

Tamara K.
November 3, 2009
Shame!
[This reminds me of a Robert Heinlein quote:

A whore should be judged by the same criteria as other professionals offering services for pay--such as dentists, lawyers, hairdressers, physicians, plumbers, etc. Is she professionally competent? Does she give good measure? Is she honest with her clients?

It is possible that the percentage of honest and competent whores is higher than that of plumbers and much higher than that of lawyers. And enormously higher than that of professors.

Lazarus Long
A character in several books by Robert Heinlein.

Getting back to Tamara's quote...

The problem is that people are still largely driven by some evolutionary advantageous urge to listen to and obey those whose faces are familiar rather than actually think for themselves. But of course that presumes said person is capable of and willing to think for themselves. I'm not convinced the majority of people are up to the task yet we protect them from their own stupidity almost as if they were children who would grow up someday. I sometimes see a future where the system collapses and Darwin collects on a massive debt we have been accumulating for the last 100 years. It would have been far, far better in so many ways to pay off Darwin in regular installments than to have the Grim Reaper swing his scythe in such a broad swath as I sometimes see as plausible.--Joe]

# Monday, November 02, 2009
By: Joe Huffman Monday, November 02, 2009 6:59:43 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Bloggers | Gun Rights )

The Second Amendment Foundation, NRA, Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms and the Washington Arms Collectors filed suit against the city of Seattle (see all the SAF news release):

"Every time the anti-gunners want to push gun control, they say we are doing this for the children," said Alan Gottlieb with the Second Amendment Foundation. "It's almost like it's their lead banner every single time, no matter what."

They say the ban violates Washington State's long-standing preemption statute.

"The ban makes it impossible, under threat of criminal trespass penalty, to lawfully carry firearms for the protection of spouses, partners and children on public property where these citizens have a right to be," he said.

But there was some support for the ban at Green Lake.

"I don't know why anyone needs a gun at a playground or any place where there are kids around," said Brain Nevenhouse.

But for others, they say the need for protection is everywhere. One of those party to the suit is Bob Kennar who supervises parolees for the state. He carries his own gun, because some of the bad guys don't like him.

"It's in the back of my mind," Kennar said. "I don't lose sleep over it, but like the police I know there's a chance that could happen."

Kennar has carried a gun for 29 years. He says the city of Seattle can't tell him no.

Ray Carter is gay. He's a founder of the Seattle Chapter of Pink Pistols. He carries a .380 because he says gays are targets and police can't prevent that.

"They can show up in time to write the report and mop up the blood and maybe find out who did it," Carter said. "As a potential victim that doesn't do me a lot of good."

Carter and Kennar use parks and community centers They understand the desire to protect children, but say they need protection too.

Ray Carter is a Seattle area blogger who uses a pseudonym so I'll not provide the link to his blog. But I have known Ray since long before there were blogs. Ray has been a force in gun rights for many years. See for example this Seattle Time Editorial that mentions both Ray and I. It was at a pizza restaurant in Seattle where Ray, some other pro-gun people and I were planning our (political) attack against the anti-gun organization Washington CeaseFire who had been scoring some painful blows against our rights in the late 1990s. It was Ray who said we should call our little organization for Washington Cease Fear. It was while doing work for this group that I came up with my Jews in the Attic Test. That organization didn't thrive even though it still exists as a the Yahoo Group ceasefear. About a year after our founding and work on Capital Hill (see the Jews in the Attic Test web page) the Pink Pistols came out with essentially the same idea and took the nation by storm. Ray was a founding member of the Seattle Chapter of the Pink Pistols.

I'm not surprised he is taking point on this lawsuit.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, November 02, 2009 6:46:41 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Crap for brains | Freedom | Gun Rights )

As our neighbors to the north attempt to regain a little bit of their freedom the anti-freedom people are "horrified and fearful":

Gun-control advocates say they are horrified and fearful that Canada's long-gun firearms registry is on the verge this week of being scrapped because the Conservatives may have enough support from the opposition to kill it.

Wendy Cukier, president of the Coalition for Gun Control, says her organization has been monitoring the progress of a Conservative private member's bill to abolish the registry and is now bracing for it to clear an important vote in the Commons on Wednesday.

"It is astonishing, just a few months after the opposition parties voted for a Bloc Québécois motion that reiterated support for the firearms registry and against efforts to repeal it, that many of the same MPs will support this Conservative bill," Cukier said Sunday.

"It not only eliminates the need to register rifles and shotguns but requires that the information contained on seven million registered guns be destroyed."

I find it very telling they don't tell us how many crimes the two billion dollar gun registry helped solved. The last time I heard a number it was one. Yes, one crime was solved that would not have been solved without it. Two billion dollars to solve one crime and these people are "horrified and fearful"?

The only conclusion that I can come up with is that it's not about crime. It's about control. They are "horrified and fearful" they will have less control.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, November 02, 2009 6:38:54 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Fun | Gun Rights )

As strongly as the U.K. is politically opposed to guns in the hands of private citizens it sometimes seems they have a fascination with people in the U.S. having guns. Here is an example:

Debbie Ferns travels the USA organising "Ladies Only Gun Camps" complete with pink weapons to encourage women to take up shooting.

Mrs Ferns, 55, from Tucson, Arizona, has also written a book called Babes with Bullets, Women Having Fun With Guns.

"Every woman in America should shoot a gun," said Mrs Ferns, who has more than 20 in her home collection.

She added "As long as the woman is a legal and law-abiding citizen I feel they should at least have a basic education in firearms safety."

The three-day camps, which cost £400, are exploding across the country and in January next year a US TV show will begin documenting the female gun trend.

"It started with one camp in 2004 and now we're planning 15 to 20 camps for 2010," said Debbie, who has helped recruit over 1,000 women to the shooting world.

"Women love it. We get schoolteachers, lawyers, nurses, women from all walks of life.

"They come in as novices and go away with a brand new skill using a powerful tool.

"Quite often they make new lifelong friends at camp as well."

The women-only gun camps are particularly popular with women over the age of 35, up to those in their 60s.

"We have so much fun and it's very exciting.

"It's a fast paced program and by the third day of camp we have women safely drawing from holsters and shooting on the move," said Mrs Ferns. "We often get emails from women telling us that the camp has changed their lives."

There's more and it is a very positive article. I have to wonder what that means for the future of gun ownership in the U.K. Is it an indicator of change for their firearm bans?

By: Joe Huffman Monday, November 02, 2009 5:52:06 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

I am not arguing here that higher rates of gun ownership cause higher rates of crime, violent crime, or homicide. Such causation is difficult to show because so many other factors bear on the incidence of crime. For instance, simple cross-national comparisons of gun availability and crime do not control for the degree to which various countries impose legal restrictions on firearms. It also is difficult to sort out whether high levels of gun ownership lead to high crime rates or whiter high crime rates lead to high levels of gun ownership.

Dennis A. Henigan
Lethal Logic: Exploding the Myths That Paralyze American Gun Policy page 107.
[I find this an extremely interesting admission. With this admission how can he in good faith advocate for restricting private citizen access to firearms? In essence he is admitting that he cannot answer Just One Question yet he wants to push the envelope as far as he can in infringing upon a specific enumerated right.

As I said in a Tweet yesterday after getting off the plane, I'm nearly certain I could find a fatal flaw on every page of his book. It's filled with half-truths, cherry picked data, and straw man arguments. I stand behind my nickname of Half-Truth Henigan for him.

I do have to give him credit for pointing out a few valid instances of NRA (almost all his attention is directed at the NRA) overstating things as well. John Lott gets some valid criticism too. He is not stupid but he's not going to be winning any awards for piercing insight either.

I'll be posting much more on this book over the next few days. In the meantime take a look at Dave Kopel's review of it.--Joe]

# Sunday, November 01, 2009
By: Joe Huffman Sunday, November 01, 2009 12:08:24 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Home Life )

We had a nice time on our cruise. Below is a picture from the wedding (it was on a beach on a Disney Island, not on the ship like I said earlier):

Barb and I were somewhat surprised at the nice time we had. Disney, as usual, paid a lot of attention to detail on the cruise and their island (99 year lease I was told). More pictures and stories later. Barb says we can check our bags in now at the Alaska Airlines ticket counter (we are still in Orlando).

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, November 01, 2009 11:37:52 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Politics | Quote of the Day )

I've seen many politicians paralyzed in the legs as myself, but I've seen more of them who were paralyzed in the head.

George Wallace
[I'm not a fan of his politics but I can't help but wonder if Wallace wouldn't have more than one ax to grind with the current occupant of the White House. I'm not saying all of them would be valid but from the above quote I think at least one would be applicable.--Joe]

By: Joe Huffman Sunday, November 01, 2009 10:48:04 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Crap for brains | Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

The column achieved what it was supposed to do. It got people thinking about the problems associated with assault weapons.

Whether you believe there's a problem or not, the reality trumps your rhetoric and your use of conservative/NRA babble trying to pass for the truth.

I don't have the answers, but if enough people work on it they will come.

Dave Stancliff
September 13, 2009 4:13 PM
Comment to Let's face it, no one will take the high road to gun control
In response to demonstration that his "facts" in an anti-gun editorial were all wrong.
["If enough people work on it" they will be able to refute verifiable facts? I suppose if the Ministry of Truth (or is it the Truth Czar these days?) puts enough people on the problem it's possible.--Joe] 

# Saturday, October 31, 2009
By: Joe Huffman Saturday, October 31, 2009 11:44:51 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Politics | Quote of the Day )

I know many books that have bored their readers, but I know of none which has done real evil.

Voltaire
[Voltaire was wrong. This is not to take issue with Voltaire's primary message of strong civil liberties in general or even free speech in particular.

Voltaire should have known of the tens or hundreds of thousands kill because some religious book said followers should kill, maim, or enslave non-believers. But he didn't live at a time to have seen the hundreds of millions dead due, in large part, to Karl Marx's The Communist Manifesto. One can use the same arguments used in defense of the First Amendment in defense the Second Amendment. People that claim free speech doesn't harm people like guns do only have to shown the millions and millions of dead in the Soviet Union, China, and other "people's paradises". And the sad part is that private weapons ownership would have prevented most of those deaths.

--Joe]

# Friday, October 30, 2009
By: Joe Huffman Friday, October 30, 2009 11:32:53 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Fun | Quote of the Day )

I love Annie Oakley. So much.
 ...
I hope I grow up to be that cool.

Laurel
October 26, 2009
This may be the coolest thing I've ever seen.
[And I think it's pretty cool there are women like Laurel as my neighbor in Moscow, Idaho.--Joe]

# Thursday, October 29, 2009
By: Joe Huffman Thursday, October 29, 2009 7:47:05 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Blog stuff | Home Life )

I just found out while I will have Internet access while on our cruise there is a price involved: $0.75/minute.

Roaming charges on my cell phone are $2.26/minutes.

Unless I can find something cheaper I'll be offline until sometime on Sunday.

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, October 29, 2009 5:13:08 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Crap for brains | Gun Rights )

The numbers and the law don't support their position so they result to insults, distortion, and copyright violation:

There is an America still stuck in the fifties, isolated from our cities and from each other by virtue and circumstance and the placement of highways and byways.

Where no gangs roam and real gun play is only on TV and children are not killed by stray bullets but by accident and by suicide in flaccid homes, all for the idle dreams of idle men made more flaccid by their flaccid imaginations.

They are white, nice and stuck, flaccid fools clinging to a romantic fantasy that disguises their impotent existence if not their impotence.

Armchair Constitutional scholars between clocking out and passing out.  This is flaccid tea party America.  Heels in the mud, Palin on the tube and loaded gun in good working condition, exceeded only by that of the remote.

For flaccid America, killing is an idea, a fantasy pastime, a friend of boredom, that seems to bear the right not to be.

Here is the original picture:

By: Joe Huffman Thursday, October 29, 2009 3:48:44 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

Writing the ATF and providing them with your information is akin to giving thieves your home address and the hours you won’t be home.

Dudley Brown
October 17, 2009
Executive Director National Association for Gun Rights
ATF Goes On The Offense
[This is probably exaggerating just a bit. But I'm pretty sure the ATF is not as responsive to public opinion as some other agencies are. Writing to the people that decide their funding is going to be more effective. They listen to the people with purse strings.--Joe]

# Wednesday, October 28, 2009
By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, October 28, 2009 6:46:14 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( A Security Theater | Gun Rights | Home Life )

Barb and I made it through A Security Theater and are now waiting at the gate ready to board our flight to Orlando.

I'm wearing this shirt:

It seemed to get a smile from one of the TSA agents. I wonder if it was because he agreed with it or because he knew I wasn't carrying at the time--he and his co-workers had defeated me for the moment.

By: Joe Huffman Wednesday, October 28, 2009 6:41:18 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Quote of the Day )

I don’t think a creative solution is needed. Only one that is straight to the root of the problem: Coming from a country which does not believe that civilians should be allowed to carry arms for self-defense, Singapore - and we have a very low crime rate, and even lower crime rate involving arms - why don’t Americans consider taking back all the guns civilians are allowed to have once and for all?


Li Li
October 26, 2009
Comment to Looking to Blog Readers for Good Ideas to Reduce Teen Shootings
[Because freedom is better than bondage and tyranny, it fails my Jews in the Attic Test, and it would be a violation of a specific enumerated right. Try answering Just One Question then get back to me.--Joe]

# Tuesday, October 27, 2009
By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, October 27, 2009 8:47:05 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Freedom | Gun Rights | Politics )

Montana and Tennessee passed it. Ohio is now considering it:

Reps. Seth Morgan, R-Huber Heights, and Jarrod Martin, R-Beavercreek, have introduced legislation that would allow for firearms made and sold within Ohio to be exempt from federal firearms regulations.

Morgan said that House Bill 315 is mainly a preemptive effort to protect the state in the event President Barack Obama’s administration tries to push any new federal regulations.

My opinion is here.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, October 27, 2009 8:26:02 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Freedom | Gun Rights | Politics )

Bob Barr says the U.N. is coming to take our guns:

The real agenda of these folks at the UN, and in London, Tokyo, Brasilia, and the other capitals around the world of nations pushing the US to “come on board,” is not international regulation, but limiting the freedom we enjoy within the United States to keep and bear arms.

Back in the mid-1990s the NRA sent out postcards for members to mail to the head of the U.N. saying what they had planned was illegal under the U.S. Bill of Rights. I added a note to the one I sent. I told him the guns wouldn't be voluntarily turned in even with monetary compensation. And if they sent people to take them by force to make sure anyone they sent brought their own body bags.

I still am of that opinion and I've had a lot more time to prepare and prepare others for such circumstances (see also here). And my neighbors have similar opinions.

Μολὼν λαβέ.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, October 27, 2009 7:22:54 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Boomershoot | Gun Fun )

Say Uncle has a link to a video on how to make a fireball shooter. How cute!

But that's not a fireball. This is a fireball:

That is daughter Kim visible in the video. Her cousin Lacy, off screen, provides most of the extra sound effects.

By: Joe Huffman Tuesday, October 27, 2009 7:15:01 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( A Security Theater | Crap for brains | Freedom | Quote of the Day )

Why can't people just do what they're told? When we do our taxes do we ask why line 35 is subtracted from line 22? Do we argue with the judge when he makes a decision or a cop tells us not to stand in a certain place? No.

We are subjects of the government that is supposed to care of us. Whether the rules are stupid or illogical, do what you're told by authorities. The rules are for your own good.

Life will be a lot simpler if you do what you're told.

Anonymous
October 24, 2009 7:01 PM
Response to "Bag Check" Cartoon
[I'm just not quite sure if this person was serious or sarcastic. I'm about 80% sure it was serious. And that is extremely scary to me.

And the TSA has a blog? What a hoot! I wish I had the time to go play with them more. I left a comment at the above link but due to moderation it hasn't shown up yet. I essentially just left a link to What TSA really stands for. So it may be that won't make it past moderation.--Joe]

Update: The comment made it through moderation and I'm getting hits from it. There is also a automatically generated link to this post as well that is getting a few hits.

# Monday, October 26, 2009
By: Joe Huffman Monday, October 26, 2009 10:22:28 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Home Life )

Barb and I are going to a wedding this week. We leave Wednesday and get back on Sunday. The wedding takes place on a cruise ship in the Bahamas. This wedding is part of the reason we didn't really have budget for attending any big gun events this year like the NRA Convention or the Gun Blogger Rendezvous.

I mention this because we might have time for lunch in the Orlando area on Sunday after we get back from the cruise if anyone wanted to say hi.

By: Joe Huffman Monday, October 26, 2009 9:49:17 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Gun Fun | Gun Rights )

I've often wondered how many rounds per year of ammo we go through in the U.S. Some say about nine billion others say about five billion as of 1992. Some say the world wide production is only 14 billion. Yet CCI (Lewiston Idaho) says they alone are going to produce more than six billion this year.

Six billion bullets in one year from just one company. Do you want to compute the odds on how safe bullets are compared to cars, swimming pools, and ladders? It's beyond astronomical, it's governmental*.


*I think it was one of the recent Vicious Circle podcasts that made mention of this joke.

By: Lyle at UltiMAK Monday, October 26, 2009 7:27:36 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00) ( Current News | Economics | Gun Rights | Politics )

It's time to restate this.  I posted it last year, and I wonder if anyone really "got it".  It cannot be overstated.  Reading Joe's recent post about the open carry debate among the pro gun rights camp reminded me of it, once again.  That debate can be said to be between people with the same basic principles.  We'll see how Rand's "rules of engagement" as I call them, apply.  Last year I noted;

In the essay, Rand defines three rules "...about the working of principles in practice and about the relationship of principles to goals." 

Wait.  What?  "the working of principles in practice"?  What's that?  "The relationship of principles to goals"?  Sounds pretty juicy if there's anything to it.  Well, there is.

 Leaving out her extensive lead-in:

1. In any conflict between two men (or two groups) who hold the same basic principles, it is the more consistent one who wins.

Open carry verses keeping it hidden so as not to scare or offend anyone.  Which position is more consistent with the basic principles of RKBA?

2. In any collaboration between two men (or two groups) who hold different basic principles, it is the more evil or irrational one who wins.

It applies to any situation, but the idea of government "taking care of" the American people, shared by Republicans and Democrats, comes to mind.  Democrats win here.  Every time.  Republicans will never understand this.  It's not in their DNA to understand this rule.  It's in their DNA to deny it.  The NRA had a similar problem about 15 years ago, but they seem to be getting over it, like getting over a very long-lasting flu.  You cannot collaborate with someone who holds different basic principles and expect a nice outcome.  It's better to do your own thing, unless you want to be the more evil and irrational one.

3. When opposite basic principles are clearly and openly defined, it works to the advantage of the rational side;

Gun control debate.  Practicing rule 3, without fully understanding it, is the one and only source of our recent successes.  Understand it, Little Grasshopper, and you will go far.  Some of us think that we've been trying to appear rational as a selling point, or trying to get the opposition to think that we aren't bad people after all, but it is by simply being rational, and by being rational in a public way, and sometimes in an in-your-face way, that we win.  There's a fine distinction here, but a very important one.  Selling ourselves as people is what Republicans do.  That argument says, "I'm a nice, decent person, so you should agree with me."  Blech.  Selling our ideas, on their own merits, and damn the torpedoes because we know we're right and we can prove it, we know our opposition is wrong, disastrously wrong, and we can prove that, is what rational people do.

when they (principles) are not clearly defined, but are hidden or evaded, it works to the advantage of the irrational side.

Taking RKBA in light of that last bit; hiding your (our) position (that guns in public are a good thing) or evading it, tends to work in favor of the irrational side (gun restrictions).  We're trying to coddle those who are wrong, trying to sell ourselves in a way tailored so as to appeal to their stupidity and bad behavior.  In so doing we lend them an appearance of credibility or legitimacy that they do not deserve.  Like it or not, that's how it works.  We have to understand that there are some people who have no credibility, have no legitimacy and deserve no accommodation (anti gunners in this case, or people who are offended or "scared" by visible guns [I think most or all of the "fear" is a cheap act perpetrated for maximum drama]) and we have to be ready to point out why.

I believe there are enough examples in most people's day-to-day lives that these basic axioms, Rand's rules of engagement, will be seen as not only valid but very useful once you look at things with them in mind.  Working with institutions installing and troublshooting PA systems (I have an appointment tomorrow) I've run into all these situations.  They're political events as much as anything else.